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Winning
the Battle and Not Knowing It
by
Justin Hart
There is a battle
afoot; a great battle pitting the minions of the deceived against
the armies of truth. This battle is not being fought with guns,
spears, or daisy cutters (at least it hasn't come to blows for the
last 100 years). Rather, this is a battle of words, geared to expose
Mormonism as a movement, a religion, fraught with errors and rife
with gospel perversions. But take heart, if you're reading this
article, you're likely on the winning the side of this battle, for
up against the most intense scrutiny by those who would pull it
down, the gospel of Jesus Christ fares well. Let me explain.
In 1997, two
evangelical scholars published an article in a scholarly journal
entitled: "Mormon Scholarship, Apologetics, and Evangelical Neglect:
Losing the Battle and Not Knowing It?". In it they examined
anti-Mormon literature and Mormon apologetics. What did they find?
Well, in their own words:
Mormonism,
has, in recent years, produced a substantial body of literature
defending their beliefs... In this battle the Mormons are fighting
valiantly. And the evangelicals? It appears that we may be losing
the battle and not knowing it.
Their purpose
in publishing the article was hardly to concede the battle. Indeed,
their efforts were "to serve to awaken members of the evangelical
community to the important task at hand."
With this article,
these two scholars, Carl Mosser and Paul Owen, walked away from
traditional anti-Mormon approaches, namely: belittling, ignorance,
and flat-out lying. Instead, the authors actually visited FARMS
at BYU and met with many prominent scholars of the church. They
read the major works on both sides of the debate and presented their
findings openly and honestly. Their approach was seen by many in
the LDS community as a fresh step in a lengthy debate.
"Their scholars
are qualified, ambitious, and prolific."
Owen
and Mosser start their article by disbanding several myths that
have been persistent among evangelicals regarding the church:
- "There are
few, if any, traditional Mormon scholars with training in fields
pertinent to evangelical-Mormon debates"
- "When Mormons
receive training in historiography, biblical languages, theology
and philosophy they invariably abandon traditional LDS beliefs
in the historicity of the Book of Mormon and the prophethood of
Joseph Smith"
- "Liberal
Mormons have so shaken the foundations of LDS belief that Mormonism
is crumbling apart"
- "Neo-orthodox
Mormons have influenced the theology of their Church to such a
degree that it will soon abandon traditional emphases and follow
a path similar to the RLDS or the World-Wide Church of God"
From their research,
Mosser and Owen come to several conclusions:
- "There are,
contrary to popular evangelical perceptions, legitimate Mormon
scholars."
- "Mormon
scholars and apologists… have, with varying degrees of success,
answered most of the usual evangelical criticisms."
- "There are
no books from an evangelical perspective that responsibly interact
with contemporary LDS scholarly and apologetic writings"
- "The sophistication
and erudition of LDS apologetics has risen considerably while
evangelical responses have not… We are losing the battle
and do not know it."
- "Most involved
in the counter-cult movement lack the skills and training necessary
to answer Mormon scholarly apologetic"
From the Mormon
perspective these are unprecedented and stunning admissions. Many
members (including myself) can speak to the frustrations involved
in defending the church from debunked attacks that are more than
a century old. Modern-day anti-Mormon literature will frequently
insert whole tracts from19th century criticisms and call
it a day. Still others will dabble in psycho-analytics around Joseph
Smith and early church members. Up until Owen and Mosser, there
have been very few critiques that had addressed Mormon scholarship
at all.
The article
goes on to briefly examine many Mormon apologetic works. From Hugh
Nibley to David Paulsen, from C. Wilfred Griggs to Stephen Robinson,
their conclusion is reiterated: "Mormons have the training and skills
to produce robust defenses of their faith."
Still, further
in the piece, Owen and Mosser examine some prominent anti-Mormon
works and find: "…a refusal to do serious scholarly investigation.
It is either the result of apathy or inability."[6] In response
to this vacuous space they exclaim: "The silence has become deafening.
And it is getting louder."
These musings
have led to a series of interesting and worthwhile exchanges. Over
the coming weeks we will examine this sea-change. Next week: How
Wide the Divide?
Note: All
quotes and citations are taken from "Mormon Scholarship, Apologetics,
and Evangelical Neglect: Losing the Battle and Not Knowing It?".
Trinity Journal Fall '98, p179-205.
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